Originally posted by WholeToneMusic
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Feeding the habit: What do you do with your old builds? How/where do you sell them?
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Maybe that's the internet blackmail of the future, some joker gets your gear and posts a YouTube video ...so bad... you consider paying them just to remove it!
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Well, like most of you guys, my best screamin' deal is that I will build one up for about the cost of the parts. My goal is to not lose any money on parts & materials. Making a profit (i.e. charging for my labor) doesn't seem feasible, because like you have pointed out, most of the cost-conscious musicians out there can buy a name brand tube amp for the same price, and it has a prettier front panel.
Our home-built amps could get pretty pricey if we charged for all the labor we put into them! If you figured a standard technician bench rate of $40 an hour, you can easily rack up $700or $800 in labor by the time you add up all the time required to do a good job. Add that to the $400 in parts & materials, and that's what our amps "should" be worth.
If I can sell an amp occasionally to recoup some of my parts costs, it makes my wife feel better about my hobby/addiction.
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Originally posted by jmaf View PostToday I came across this: YouTube - Dragon RatIn the future I invented time travel.
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Originally posted by cminor9 View PostThey have a whole line of pedals. I think the best playing (probably anywhere on youtube) is to be found on the chorus pedal video. I know guys who have spent a whole lifetime and couldn't play quite like that. I think the guy from Collective Soul might be better, but only maybe.
I listened to the chorus video. It's a tough call which one is better- the dragon rat or the chorus pedal.
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Originally posted by imaradiostar View PostDude, that's going too far.
Generally, I don't like trashing someone else's playing. We're all at different skill levels. There are some really nice guys who can't play worth a crap and some real douches who can really lay it down. But since we *were* having some fun, and those videos were just SO bad, I jumped in. For all I know, you could be Ross. Nothing personal dude.In the future I invented time travel.
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I'm really new at this stuff, but I have at least been able to work out one deal to my benefit. I finished a 35 watt PA conversion and put it up on Craigslist with a link to a youtube demo. I did put some hours into it, but a lot of that I can attribute to a big learning curve. I only had maybe $25 in parts and paint into a 'got it for free' amp. So I went high with $650, and almost immediately got interest from a guy I had previously made some trades with. Long story short, I got a sweet custom hollowbody I saw advertised online for $520.
The moral to the story is... people without enough money to buy a nice vintage tube amp sometimes have other stuff they're willing to give up for one.
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Hey, that's a great idea!
Unfortunately, I'd have to trade about 7 of my builds for one guitar I want: a vintage Gibson L-5 with the sharp cutaway, only made in the 60s.
Update to the story: I haven't sold my amp yet, but I've got a network of my guitar buddies contacting their friends about it. They're better salespeople than I am, because they're raving about the amp. It should sell soon, and for maybe $100 labor. Not the greatest rate, but better than at cost!
It also seems that there's a lot of repair work out there--when guys hear that I built this amp, I instantly get asked to fix their such-and-such amp. That will likely prove more lucrative, though repair isn't as fun as building.
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